cribble

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French crible, from Late Latin criblus (sieve).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈkɹɪbəl/
    • Audio (Southern England):(file)

Noun

cribble (plural cribbles)

  1. A coarse sieve or screen.
  2. Coarse flour or meal.
    • 1696, Samuel Jeake, Λογιστολογία:
      Bread made of the whole Wheat is sometime called Cribble or fine Ravel Bread

Verb

cribble (third-person singular simple present cribbles, present participle cribbling, simple past and past participle cribbled)

  1. To pass something through a sieve.

Adjective

cribble (comparative more cribble, superlative most cribble)

  1. (obsolete) coarse
    • 1849, Henry Bullinger, H. I (translator), The Decades
      The gardens, with digging for novelties, are turned over and over, because we will not eat common cribble bread.